The soaking process is the same for everything--take from brine, wash clean in tepid water, put to soak in cold water with something on top to hold the pickles down.
Take from fire, and add if you like, two tablespoonfuls cream, but it is not essential--the dressing is good without it.
Take from fire, let cool, drop in an egg--it should float to show the size of a quarter of a dollar.
That is to take from it the old woman who was wanted in the conspiracy.
Grimm and Diderot, in their project to take from me the governesses, had used the greatest efforts to make Duclos enter into their views; but this he refused to do with disdain.
The first exploit performed by the Prevot des Marchands, was to take from me my freedom of the theatre, and this in the most uncivil manner possible.
But how could I take from my daughter's son the only inheritance she left him?
In a few weeks I may call you into the field again--and here I come thrusting myself in, to take from you a portion of your brief season of happiness.
To take from a thief, as goods known to be stolen.
To take from a captor; to recapture; as, to retake a ship or prisoners.
Defn: To dig ortake from a quarry; as, to quarry marble.
The following advertisements, which we take from a newspaper published in the vicinity, will show how they catch their Negroes who believe in the doctrine that "all men are created free.
The following scene, which wetake from a newspaper in the state of Ohio, will give some idea of the extent to which this prejudice is carried.
To abolish slavery, is to take from no rightful owner his property; but to "establish justice" between two parties.
Mr. Grand's advances, I had ventured to order him to take from a sum of money lodged in his hands for the State of Virginia for the purchase of arms.
That opportunity Which then they had to take from's, to resume We haue againe.
Now that she knew what she and Jon were up against, her longing for him had increased tenfold, as if he were a toy with sharp edges or dangerous paint such as they had tried to take from her as a child.
The reply of Beaumarchais is so characteristic and shows so clearly the crude strength of his nature as well as his sense of justice that we take from it a rather long extract.
It is sufficient for the present that your judgment, Gentlemen, assures to me the honor which my adversary wishes to take from me, but which I hope to receive from your equity and from your insight.
I never have thrown an envious eye upon the productions of others of my profession, but it is with great impatience that I see others attempting to take from me the foundation which by study and work I have acquired.
The preceding information I take from a very vague account written by Sr Arias and published in the Museo Mexicano.
The first of my engravings I take from Stephens' Yucatan, vol.
The following cut I take from Baldwin's work, for which it was copied from one of Tempsky's plates.
Besides this nothing that he so plentifully gives me, the something that nature gave me his countenance seems to take from me.
That opportunity, Which then they had totake from 's, to resume We have again.
No extended argument would be required to show that the power to take from a man his thought, his will, his personality, is a power of life and death; and that to enslave a man is to kill him.
But, if Homer wishes to take from me all that I possess, and make me his slave in return for his inimitable poem, I will give up the pleasure of his lays, and dismiss him.
Wasn't, in fine, the pledge that they would "manage in their own way" the thing he had been feeling for his chance to invite her to take from him?
She knew what she meant and what she liked, and he was all ready to take from her, finding a good omen in both of the facts.
The Rule of Subtraction is perhaps the most useful in either national, political, or commercial Arithmetic; "TAKE FROM" being the universal maxim of mankind from the day that Adam and Eve stole the forbidden fruit.
I apprehended that our Lord was beginning in earnest to take from me every place of abode; and those words were renewed in my mind, "The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests, but the Son of man hath not where to lay his head.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "take from" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.